Introduction
CAGR is a useful metric, no doubt. It tells you how fast an investment appears to have grown each year over time. Read about how to calculate CAGR of you investment portfolio.
But the real world is rarely smooth, and investors often make decisions based on practical needs rather than mathematical elegance.
That’s where absolute returns quietly prove their value.
If you’ve ever looked at an investment and wondered, “So how much did I actually make?”, then you already understand why absolute returns matter.
CAGR may impress you with percentages, but absolute return gives you the number you can actually feel happy seeing it. And when decisions hinge on real money, those numbers (absolute return) matter more than the tidy annualized figure (CAGR).
The point isn’t that CAGR is useless, it’s essential in many comparisons. But there are cases where relying on CAGR can mislead you. In such cases, absolute return gives a clearer, more honest picture.
To prove this point, let me show you a few examples where absolute returns tell you something that CAGR simply can’t.
1. When the Time Frame Is Short or Uneven
Scenario:
- Investment A grows from Rs. 1,00,000 to Rs. 1,30,000 in one year.
- Investment B grows from Rs. 1,00,000 to Rs. 1,50,000 in three years.
CAGRs:
- A: 30%
- B: 14.5%
CAGR tells you A is the better performer.
But what if your goal was to accumulate at least Rs. 50,000 for a down payment?
Absolute returns say:
- A gave you Rs. 30,000
- B gave you Rs. 50,000
Even with a lower CAGR, B met the goal; A didn’t. Here, absolute return gives the meaningful answer.
2. When You Need to Evaluate Real Progress Toward a Financial Goal
Say you need Rs. 10 lakh in five years to fund a child’s education.
- Portfolio X grows from Rs. 6 lakh to Rs. 9 lakh in that period.
- Portfolio Y grows from Rs. 6 lakh to Rs. 8 lakh (not in the same period).
CAGRs:
- X: ≈ 8.4%
- Y: ≈ 6.1%
Based purely on CAGR, X is better. But the critical question is: Who is closer to the goal?
Absolute returns:
- X gained Rs. 3 lakh
- Y gained Rs. 2 lakh
Absolute return tells you how much more you must still arrange. CAGR doesn’t help answer that question at all.
3. When Volatility Skews CAGR
Investments with wild ups and downs can end up with attractive CAGRs even if the journey was painful.
Example:
Year 1: –40%
Year 2: +70%
Investment ends positive overall.
CAGR: ~10.7%. It looks like a decent performer.
But if you invested Rs. 5,00,000, here’s the real picture:
- After Year 1: Rs. 3,00,000
- After Year 2: Rs. 5,10,000
- Absolute gain: Rs. 10,000
Is Rs. 10,000 in two years worth celebrating? CAGR may suggest a yes for you. Absolute return may say otherwise.
4. When You Compare Unequal Starting Amounts
Suppose you top up investments at different times or invest different amounts across products.
Example:
- Fund A: You invest Rs. 1,00,000 and it becomes Rs. 1,40,000
- Fund B: You invest Rs. 50,000 and it becomes Rs. 80,000
CAGRs:
- A: ≈ 8.8%
- B: ≈ 16.7%
CAGR says Fund B is superior. But your actual gain:
- A: Rs. 40,000
- B: Rs. 30,000
If your goal is wealth accumulation, A added more to your net worth, regardless of CAGR.
Conclusion
Sometimes, the destination matters more than the journey.
If your portfolio grew from Rs. 10 lakh to Rs. 15 lakh, the fact that the CAGR is 8% or 9% is secondary.
The key takeaway is: you now have Rs. 5 lakh more.
For financial planning, life goals, spending decisions, and cash-flow needs, absolute return is often the metric that actually tells you what you can do next.
CAGR is excellent for comparing investments over time, but it can mask short-term distortions, volatility, cash flows, and goal-specific outcomes.
Absolute return, meanwhile, answers the most practical question investors have: How much money did I really make? And in many real-world situations, that answer is the one that matters more.
